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Six Frames: For Thinking About Information (Paperback)

~ Edward De Bono (Author)
3.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)

Price: $14.73 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping on orders over $25. Details
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Six Frames: For Thinking About Information + Six Thinking Hats + Creativity Workout: 62 Exercises to Unlock Your Most Creative Ideas
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Product Description

Attention is a key part of thinking clearly and productively, and yet we pay very little attention to attention itself. If you see someone lying injured in the middle of the road, for example, your attention would go to that person but, if a bright pink dog wandered past at the same time, your attention would automatically stray to the dog. That is precisely the weakness of attention - it is pulled to the unusual. How much attention do we pay to the usual? So, what can we do about it? Instead of waiting for attention to be pulled towards something unusual, we can set out frameworks for 'directing' our attention in a conscious manner.Just as we can decide to look north, west or even south-east, so we can set up a framework for directing our attention, and that's where Edward de Bono's 'six frames' come in. Each frame is a direction or method in/with which to look, based on a different shape - triangle, circle, heart, square, diamond, slab. Today we are literally surrounded by information and it has never been so easy to obtain. Yet, information itself is not enough; it's how we look at it that really counts. Using the 'six frames' technique is the key to extracting real value from the masses of facts and figures out there and, like all de Bono's techniques, it is simple, effective and will utterly change the way you interpret information.


About the Author

Edward de Bono studied at Christ Church, Oxford (as a Rhodes Scholar), where he gained an honours degree in psychology and physiology and then a DPhil in medicine. He also holds a PhD from Cambridge and an MD from the University of Malta. He has held appointments at the universities of Oxford, London, Cambridge and Harvard. In 1967, de Bono invented the now commonly-used term 'lateral thinking' and, for many millions of people worldwide, his name has since become a symbol of creativity and new thinking. He has written numerous books, which have been translated into 40 languages, and his advice is sought by Nobel laureates and world leaders alike.

Product Details

  • Paperback: 144 pages
  • Publisher: Vermilion (August 7, 2008)
  • ISBN-10: 0091924197
  • ISBN-13: 978-0091924195
  • Product Dimensions: 8.4 x 5.3 x 0.5 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 6.4 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 3.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon.com Sales Rank: #287,831 in Books (See Bestsellers in Books)

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21 of 22 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Ambivalent about this book, but it does provide a quick way to run through incoming information with a critical eye..., October 10, 2008
'Six Frames: For Thinking about Information' by Edward de bono

I have been an avid fan of the work of creativity guru Edward de bono for a very long time, ever since I had started to acquire & read his classics, 'Mechanism of Mind', 'The Use of Lateral Thinking' &/or 'Lateral Thinking for Management', during the early seventies.

Later, I went on to acquire & read his 'Tactics; The Art & Science of Success', 'Six Thinking Hats', 'Teach Yourself How to Think', as well as 'Opportunities: A Handbook of Business Opportunity Search' in subsequent years.

For me, I have really considered them as great work, based on what I could take away, from the maestro.

I had even acquired & read his 'Serious Creativity', which I knew was more of an intellectual amalgamation of all his earlier works up to the nineties. I thought it would be a great refresher. It did, at least to my pleasant delight.

The last two books from him which I had read not too long ago were 'How to be More Interesting' & "How to Have a Beautiful Mind'. Not bad.

As for most of his other works which I had the opportunity to read in the intervening & ensuing years, I can only say that I have been most ambivalent at best. Half of the time, he was always talking about his previous stuff.

The other half of the time, I have had to read about him moaning & groaning about other people hijacking his intellectual stuff, & yet he didn't bother to credit others before him - not at all - accordingly, let alone for all of us to get a chance to smell his bibliography.

Regrettably, 'Six Frames is another example that happens, for me, to fall into this 'ambivalent' category.

In a nut shell, 'Six Frames' is supposed to be a deliberate & disciplined framework for one to think about information, from the standpoint of purpose, accuracy, point of view, interest, value & outcome.

Tactically, I see the 'Six Frames' as perspective windows, each represented by a simple metaphoric iconographic: 'Triangle', 'Circle', 'Square', 'Heart', 'Diamond' & 'Slab' respectively.

Fundamentally, I find that the author's premise is sound & valid, because as he argues, where you choose to direct your attention & what you choose to notice, can affect your information problem solving, so to speak.

My disappointment is actually with the author's treatment, which seems to be superfluous & pompous to some extent. If only he had made concerted efforts to help the reader to "see" ideas out of the "information", that would have given more added credibility to his offering.

That is to say, to teach the reader how to "provoke insight" from the swirling information around us, to paraphrase his terminology.

Also, I find that some of the worked examples in the book pertaining to the frames seem to be too perfunctory. As a reader, I don't get the "provocative operacy", i.e. the skills of "making things happen" with the postulated frames from the author, to paraphrase once again his terminology.

From my personal perspective, thinking about information is often quite an easy task, but the action situation - putting the intent into performance, from theory to practice, so to speak - is rarely as simple as thinking. That score is, in fact, the essence of "provocative operacy".

Sad to say, I get the feeling that the author is trying to ride on the apparent success of his earlier 'Six Thinking Hats', 'Six Action Shoes', & 'Six Value Medals', by churning out this book on 'Six Frames'.

Another sore point for me from this book is this.

The book has about 140 pages. About a third of each page, at the top, is occupied by each of the 6 iconographics. The sentencing & paragraphing of the book have also been deliberately spaced out by the publisher.

In reality, you get only about 50 pages of stuff, which therefore reinforced the quick impression of a perfunctory treatment.

Over the years, most of the de bono's stuff are essentially about the productive "philosophy of thinking" or "modes of thinking". That's to say, never tool-specific; one has to read his books thoroughly & diligently to get down to the brass tacks of application.

This book is no exception.

On the other hand, could it be that the author has already ran out of steam? I really don't know.

In fairness, I certainly want to point out that the framework as expounded in 'Six Frames' does in fact provide us with a quick way to run through incoming information with a critical eye, as to accuracy, bias, interest, relevance, value, etc.

At least, it can hold your initial attention to information that really matters.

For readers who are really keen to try out much better approaches to thinking about information with tool-specific suggestions, in order to deal with the info-glut in the 21st century, I recommend:

- the 'Big Six' from Michael Eisenberg & Robert Berkowitz;
- the 'Questioning Toolkit' from Jamie MacKenzie;

They may be slanted towards education &/or research, but with a little bit of tweaking, you can access their latent power.

For readers who want to explore "ideas through information", please read 'Ideas & Information: Managing in a High Tech World', by Arnol Penzias. This book may seem dated as it was published in 1989, but its Chapter 5, page 87 to 105, is a real gem not to be missed.

Last, but not least, 'Surviving Information Overload: The Clear, Practical Guide to Help You Stay on Top of What You Need to Know', by Kevin Miller, is also worth exploring.
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Six different ways of looking at information, April 9, 2009
By Bas Vodde (Singapore) - See all my reviews

Six Frames for thinking about information is another DeBono book related to helping people how to think. DeBono seems like like the number six... as he already created the six thinking hats, six actions shoes and the six value medals. So what are the six frames about?

The six frames provide different way or reasons for looking at a piece of information. Every frame is symbolized by a figure that presents this particular way of thinking. This way, it helps to make your thinking more explicit and even allows to communicate about the different ways of framing information.

The six frames are: Triangle for purpose, Circle for precision, Square for perspective, Diamond for value, Heart for interest and Slab for conclusion.

Therefore, if you receive a piece of information, you might look at it from the heart frame and explicitly look for the "interesting" parts in the piece of information (and perhaps takes notes of these). This allows you to focus your mind and increases your thinking ability.

The Six Frames book is small and easy to read. It contains a simple and useful idea.. and doesn't go much further than that. It doesn't provide much concrete advise on how to actually use it and doesn't provide too much example of how people have used it in their daily lives. From that perspective, the book is fairly limited.

Do I recommend to read the book? Perhaps. I always enjoy DeBonos work and, even though I do not use tools such as these explicitly, it does help me to think about thinking. So did this enjoy the book, and if you like DeBonos earlier work, then you'll probably enjoy this little book. If you are looking for a different perspective or a groundbreaking idea, then this book is probably not for you. It is simple, powerful, but probably not groundbreaking and shockingly new.

All in all, the book did what I expected it to do. I found it worth my time.
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